I think INS was an acceptable film, but it did have some strange elements. For example:
1 The crew was not staging an insurrection; rather, they were rebelling/disobeying an admiral. "Insurrection" would imply there was an attempt to overthrow Starfleet or the UFP. I guess the title is more dramatic than the more accurate "Star Trek: Insubordination".
2. Once it was discovered the Ba'ku were not a pre-warp, primitive culture (they just decided not to utilize their technology), I'd think Prime Directive issues would no longer apply. And because it's a Federation world hoarded by 600 people who are preventing helping countless people with health problems, I'd think this would be a case of "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few."
3. Because the Son'a would be able to utilize the metaphasic, live-giving particles, why couldn't they relocate the Ba'ku and give them all the metaphasic magic they want? They could still go own living indefinitely and eschewing technology, they'd just have to move to a different planet and get regular metaphasic "treatments". So I don't see the moral dilemma here, unless it's horribly wrong to relocate 600 people to a similar planet and let them continue their idyllic lifestyle forever.
Of course, the producers have to ensure the metaphasic particles remain unusable; otherwise the entire Federation's population would stop aging. That would cause severe continuity problems for the future. They could have cured Shinzon easily, but then we'd be deprived of Nemesis!
1 The crew was not staging an insurrection; rather, they were rebelling/disobeying an admiral. "Insurrection" would imply there was an attempt to overthrow Starfleet or the UFP. I guess the title is more dramatic than the more accurate "Star Trek: Insubordination".
2. Once it was discovered the Ba'ku were not a pre-warp, primitive culture (they just decided not to utilize their technology), I'd think Prime Directive issues would no longer apply. And because it's a Federation world hoarded by 600 people who are preventing helping countless people with health problems, I'd think this would be a case of "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few."
3. Because the Son'a would be able to utilize the metaphasic, live-giving particles, why couldn't they relocate the Ba'ku and give them all the metaphasic magic they want? They could still go own living indefinitely and eschewing technology, they'd just have to move to a different planet and get regular metaphasic "treatments". So I don't see the moral dilemma here, unless it's horribly wrong to relocate 600 people to a similar planet and let them continue their idyllic lifestyle forever.
Of course, the producers have to ensure the metaphasic particles remain unusable; otherwise the entire Federation's population would stop aging. That would cause severe continuity problems for the future. They could have cured Shinzon easily, but then we'd be deprived of Nemesis!
